The Bomber War
the Allied air offensive against Nazi Germany
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Author
Publication
2001 - Barnes & Noble, New York, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
112,000 words, Guess
Page Count
448 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivebomberwarallieda0000neil_y9m8
- ISBN-100760765308
- ISBN-139780760765302
- OCLC Control Number61521610
- Better World Books9780760765302
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL35733905M
Classifications
- DDC940.54
- LCCD786 .N453 2001a
Alternate Titles
- Allied air offensive against Nazi Germany
Description
The bomber campaign against Germany is one of the most contentious of World War II. Was anything achieved by the deaths of thousands of German civilians-many of them women and children? Or were all means justified against Nazi Germany? Acclaimed military historian Robin Neillands examines every detail of the allied campaign led by British Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris: the strengths and fundamental flaws, the technical difficulties and developments and, above all, the day-to-day, night-by-night endurance of the crews flying to the limit in discomfort and danger, facing flak and enemy fire. Personal experiences of British, American, Canadian, Australian and other ally fliers play a key part in this account, along with those of German airmen and civilians. Though The Bomber War discusses Guernica and the destruction of Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it concentrates on the European theater, on Germany's air war against the allies - over Warsaw, Rotterdam, London and Coventry-which led the fierce allied raids carried out against Cologne, Hamburg, Berlin and the Ruhr and-most notorious of all-the tremendous destruction of Dresden in the last months of the war. Robin Neillands also examines the complex moral issues involved in the air war, and of the case made against "Bomber" Harris. This is a timely addition to the history of conflict; the age of free-fall bombs has passed, but many veterans-on both sides-are still alive to state their case, and to tell a knew generation what their war was like.
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